Columbia Law Review Editors Demand Exams Be Canceled Due to Trauma of Law Enforcement

The student editors of the Columbia Law Review issued a statement on Wednesday urging Columbia Law School to cancel exams in the wake of the police operation that cleared the university’s unauthorized encampment, saying the "violence" had left them "irrevocably shaken" and "unable to focus."

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The statement, which represents the majority opinion of the editorial board and was endorsed by five other law journals, including the Columbia Human Rights Law Review & A Jailhouse Lawyer’s Manual, accused the police of "brutalizing" students—though no major injuries have been reported—and claimed that canceling exams was a "proportionate response" to the "distress our peers have been feeling." ...

The law review’s editor in chief is Alexandria Iraheta Sousa, a second-year law student who has worked for numerous progressive nonprofits, including a dark money group, Demand Justice, that advocates court packing. She did not respond to a request for comment.

Ed Morrissey

This seems like a propitious moment to teach the "irrevocably shaken" babies at Columbia a valuable lesson: actions have consequences. 

However, I have zero confidence in Columbia's leadedship to teach that lesson, or even to learn it themselves. I'd bet they announce a postponement of exams by this time tomorrow or sooner.

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